After the liquidation, I finally realized that contracts are not meant for a comeback.
That day after the liquidation, I stared at my account balance, which was only 0.14 U. I laughed, a particularly cold laugh. It wasn't the market that killed me; it was myself who killed myself. From opening the position to liquidation, it was all my decision; no one deceived me; I couldn't control myself.
I finally understood:
Contracts are not tools for a comeback; they are a mirror reflecting human nature.
The more you want to win, the faster you will die.
The more you don't want to lose, the easier it is to get liquidated.
Many people say, "Contracts make money quickly."
But they never tell you that:
Every liquidation is a double collapse of confidence and mentality.
The money you earn is what others have lost; it is not given by the platform.
Those screenshots of doubling profits are backed by 10 times the anxiety and gambler's mentality.
I summarized my entire process from "full of confidence → frantically adding positions → wanting to turn the tables → liquidation."
In fact, there are signs before every liquidation.
For example:
Continuously opening positions without setting stop-losses.
Clearly wrong but still holding on.
Positions so heavy that I can't even bear a "slight recovery."
Knowing that my mentality has collapsed but still pushing on.
In the end, it's not that the market is that bad; it's that you haven't trained yourself well.
Now I only believe in these three points:
1️⃣ Without a stop-loss, there is no qualification to open a position.
2️⃣ Making money is strategy; stop-loss is dignity.
3️⃣ Contracts are not regular operations; they are weapons for advanced players, not a way out for beginners #加密市场反弹 #CPI数据来袭 #美联储降息预期升温